But that didn't cut any ice, either. Will Darnell was a very old fox, and he
stayed prepared for any contingency. If Will wanted to get in and torch
Christine, he would do it although it was much more likely, Arnie thought,
In his mind's eye Arnie could see the blossoming flames. He could smell
Of course, if Will tried something and got careless—if his concentration
didn't think Will would get careless.
for a nominal sum. There would be a preliminary hearing in January, and
there was already talk of a grand jury. The bust was front-page material
across the state, although Arnie was only identified as "a youth" whose name
was "being withheld by state and Federal authorities due to his minor status."
Arnie's name was common enough knowledge in Libertyville, however. In
spite of its new exurban sprawl of drive-ins, fast-food emporiums, and
Bowl-a-Ramas, it was still a faculty town where a lot of people were living
in other people's back pockets. These people, mostly associated with
Horlicks University, knew who had been driving for Will Darnell and who
had been arrested over the New York State line with a bootful of contraband
cigarettes. It was Regina's nightmare.
Arnie went home in the custody of his parents—bailed for a thousand dollars
—after a brief detour to jail. It was all nothing but a big shitting game of
Monopoly, really. His parents had come up with the Get Out of Jail Free
card. As expected.
"What are you smiling" about, Arnie?" Regina asked him. Michael was
driving the wagon along at fast walking speed, looking through the swirls of
snow for Steve and Vicky's ranchhouse.
"Was I smiling?"
"Yes," she said, and touched her hair.
"I don't really remember," he said remotely, and she took her hand away.
They had come home on Sunday and his parents had left him pretty much
alone, either because they didn't know how to talk to him or because they
were utterly disgusted with him… or perhaps it was a combination of the
two. He didn't give a crap which, and that was the truth. He felt washed out,
exhausted, a ghost of himself. His mother had gone to bed and slept all that
afternoon, after taking the telephone off the hook. His father puttered
aimlessly in his workroom, running his electric planer periodically and then
shutting it off.
Arnie sat in the living room watching a football playoff doubleheader, not
knowing who was playing, not caring, content to watch the players run
around, first in bright warm California sunshine, later in a mixture of rain and
sleet that turned the playing field to churned-up mud and erased the lines.
Around six o'clock he dozed off.
And dreamed.
He dreamed again that night and the next, in the bed where he had slept since
earliest childhood, the elm outside casting its old familiar shadow (a
skeleton each winter that gained miraculous new flesh each May). These
dreams were not like the dream of the giant Will looming over the slotcar
track. He could not remember these dreams at all more than a few moments
after waking. Perhaps that was just as well. A figure by the roadside; a
fleshless finger tapping a decayed palm in a lunatic parody of instruction; an
uneasy sense of freedom and… escape? Yes, escape. Nothing else except…
Yes, he escaped from these dreams and back into reality with one repeating
image: he was behind the wheel of Christine, driving slowly through a
howling blizzard, snow so thick that he could literally see no farther than the
end of her hood. The wind was not a scream; it was a lower, more sinister
sound a basso roar. Then the image had changed. The snow wasn't snow any
longer; it was tickertape. The roar of the wind was the roar of a great crowd
lining both sides of Fifth Avenue. They were cheering him. They were
cheering Christine. They were cheering because he and Christine had…
had…
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